carolinaradio said:
There is always talk about younger people not listening to radio (which, as BigA said, isn't necessarily true) - but I'm noticing that actually fewer "Baby Boomers" than young people are listening to the radio. So many of them that I know are listening to SiriusXM or MP3's except for talk or NPR. Heck, more than half of the people I know with SiriusXM are in their 50s or older.
I agree with that. Those are the people with expendable income, who can afford another monthly bill, and have specific musical interests that aren't available on commercial radio because advertisers aren't interested in the demo. They're also people who dislike commercials, because they don't buy based on advertising (which is why advertisers don't target them anymore.) So the whole process is no longer aimed at people of their age. Plus, there comes a time in a person's life when listening to music stops. I've noticed it in my parents. They just stopped listening to music, and either chose talk or nothing. It has nothing to do with what's on the radio, because they have those options, but they choose not to listen to music. Boomers also tend to be the ones who are using technology to get what they want. It's not restricted to Gen X or Y. And with all of that, OTA radio listening remains flat, with occasional increases depending on format. No huge exodus of people fleeing radio, and no lack of younger listeners.